Broadcom eyes big changes for Qualcomm's patent practices

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - As part of its $103 billion (£77.9 billion) bid to buy Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O), Broadcom Ltd (AVGO.O) has hinted that it would make big changes to Qualcomm’s patent licensing business, a major cash-cow for the company but a source of bitter conflict with regulators and key customers including Apple Inc (AAPL.O).

FILE PHOTO: Broadcom Limited company logo is pictured on an office building in Rancho Bernardo, California May 12, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

But Broadcom has given few details about how it would go about revising Qualcomm’s practices. Qualcomm has so far rejected Broadcom’s takeover offer, saying the offer undervalued the company and would face regulatory hurdles.

Patent licenses accounted for some $5.1 billion in pre-tax profits for Qualcomm in its fiscal 2017, compared with $2.7 billion in pre-tax profits for its chip business that brings in two and a half times more revenue. Thus, Broadcom Chief Executive Hock Tan would need to carefully pair any changes to the programme with cost cuts elsewhere, with Qualcomm’s annual $5.5 billion research and development budget seen as a prime target by analysts.

If Broadcom is successful in buying Qualcomm, a source familiar with the matter said that Broadcom would try to maintain the economics of the licensing business by adjusting the pricing structure between the licensing and chip selling businesses. It would also attempt to renegotiate contracts with major customers, the source said.

Broadcom is eager to appease big customers like Apple, whose support is needed to overcome antitrust hurdles. While customers often look askance at consolidation among their suppliers, Broadcom has said it offers a possible solution to a conflict that has led to a regulatory crackdown, lawsuits with Apple and also has prompted others to cease paying licensing fees.

At the centre of the conflict is Qualcomm’s practise of requiring mobile phone makers to pay a license fee on its intellectual property in addition to what they pay for its chips. Qualcomm invented a number of foundational technologies for mobile communications.

In legal complaints, Apple has called Qualcomm’s approach “double dipping.” Qualcomm has repeatedly rejected the notion that its patent practices are anticompetitive and maintains that its chip business and patent business are run separately.

A Broadcom spokeswoman told Reuters in early November that it believes that regulators around the world will “welcome this deal as a solution to the double-dipping issue.” Tan said in an interview earlier this month that he believes Broadcom “can be very constructive in resolving these issues and resetting relationships. We would not have embarked on this offer if we were not confident that our common key customers would not embrace it.” Broadcom declined to comment further.

FILE PHOTO: One of many Qualcomm buildings is shown in San Diego, California, U.S. on November 3, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

Analysts said there are three possibilities for Broadcom to resolve Qualcomm’s licensing issues: sell or spin off the licensing unit, shift to a model that charges a flat fee, and simply charge more for chips, using the patents as leverage.

The simplest option for Broadcom would be to spin off Qualcomm’s licensing division to financial buyers or Qualcomm shareholders, but its valuation would be hard to gauge. Revenue from the unit has declined from $7.9 billion in 2015 to $6.4 billion in Qualcomm’s fiscal 2017, largely thanks to Apple’s and another customer’s suspension of payments.

If the licensing unit remains within Qualcomm, one possibility is that Qualcomm would ditch its unpopular practise of charging a percentage of the selling price of a phone in favour of a flat per-device fee, Cowen and Co analyst Karl Ackerman said in a research note.

The most likely course of action, according to Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon, is for Broadcom to end the practise of asking handset makers to pay licensing fees and instead to ask them to pay a little more for chips. At the same time, Broadcom would lock in long-term supply agreements, using Qualcomm’s patent portfolio as leverage, Rasgon said.

But such a move could result in lower overall prices for customers like Apple. Rasgon estimates that Apple pays about $15 for Qualcomm’s chips and another $10 per device in licensing fees, for a total of about $25 per phone. Broadcom could simply charge between $18 and $20 for the chips.

“It’s a completely different model of how to run Qualcomm,” Rasgon said. “(Broadcom’s CEO Tan) is essentially saying, ‘You guys are wrong - the licensing revenue is never coming back,'” he said.

Apple declined to comment. But the company has shown that it is willing to settle its patent disputes for the right price, often with an upfront payment and then ongoing royalties. Earlier this year, Apple settled with Nokia Oyj (NOKIA.HE), handing over a $2 billion upfront cash payment and undisclosed ongoing payments over several years.

Rasgon estimates that one way or another Qualcomm will lose about $2.5 billion per year in royalty revenues from Apple.

(The story was refiled to changes “chip customers” to “handset makers” in paragraph 12 to clarify which customers are being referred to)

Reporting by Stephen Nellis and Liana B. Baker in San Francisco; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Diane Craft